Refine Search

ALVESTON FLOWER SHOW

... Riddlford. Cat flowers-1st, E. Bush. Murillo cherries-1st, W. J. Curtis. Clierries-Ist, H. Saxton. Watercress-lst MI. Fudge, Blackberries-lst, Miss Blackmore. Bottled clder-lst, A. D. Wilcox. Doves-1st, Ray- mond Ann; 2nd, Mrs James. Guinea fowls' eggs- 1st ...

REDWICK AND NORTHWICK HORTICULTURAL SHOW

... 5. Hookings; 3rdajorPaget. :Pears,naiinary -lst, G. L. Hunt; 2nd, C;. Neale; 3rd, C. Hopkins. Nectarines-let, G. Nests. Blackberries-lst, Miss 1)DIVISION 4. For Cottagers own growth. 3 FLOWEnS.-Dabias, double-let, W. Carpenter. Mignonette-let, W. Carpenter ...

THORNBURY HORTICULTURAL SHOW

... Underbill contributed a basket ingeniously and beautifully ornamented with mess and berries, and containing crab-apples. nuts, blackberries, dewberries, elderberries, sloes, and other wild fruits; another very pretty basket of wild fruit was exhibited by Elizabeth ...

A NINETEENTH-CENTURY STUDENT

... and lively men can be termed a Terpid Crew, which is about on a par with a white blackbird, or the Irish definition of blackberries areI always red except when they are green. While such per- i eons are a ma etug over such things I will endeavour ...

MARGARET'S CHOICE

... as Captain Areher: someone undertook to ask him his reply ians charscteristic of the nian. Captains are as commnon as blackberries! Years ago when I hoped to be nfade major I put simply 'Archer' on my liggage. When I came into at bit of money I hardly ...

Literature

... We have the green and ripe Goosborry, red and white Currant, Elderberry, Quince, Cherry, Mulberry, Sloe, Orleans Pluni, Blackberry, Strawberry, Barberry, Raspberry, Primrose, Cowslip, Beetroot, Parsnip, Turnip, and many others. The most extraordinary ...

THE SCHOOLBOY's STORY

... he bad helter run away until he found a forest, where he might change clothes with a woodcutter and stain his face with blackberries; but the ma0jority believed that if he stood his 1. ground, his father-belonging as he did to the West Indies, and Bbeing ...

MUSICAL FESTIVAL SOCIETY

... Manchester, Leeds, and Glasgow, by maen who -ware worth £;100,000, £150,0t0, and £200,000 a. year, 'and could he counted like blackberries (laughter). Thoee people washed bheirdirby linen 'ab -home; and when the public did nlot 'take tickete they did not say- ...

A LOST LIFE

... shadows, fragrant violets grew, and clematis and wild roses clung together in a tangle of sweetness; where the bushes of the blackberry, with it% abundance of tinted blossoms, gave fair promise of a rich crop of its luscious fruits ; beside this lIke, in the ...

FOR PASTIME

... Europe. The mood to go was on him now-he had no patience with waiting-sa for gowns and things, they were plenty there as blackberries in New Hampshire. Miss Sturgis was a theosgh-bred. self-contained woman of the world * but she was neither without heart ...